Topic:botany

Click to see an enlarged picture
botany. (Image by Britannica)
Visit our new topic page about botany

botany

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

botany science devoted to the study of plants. Botany, microbiology, and zoology together compose the science of biology . Humanity's earliest concern with plants was with their practical uses, i.e., for fuel, clothing, shelter, and, particularly, food and drugs. The establishment of botany as an intellectual science came in classical times. In the 4th cent. BC, Aristotle and his pupil Theophrastus worked out descriptions and principles of plant types and functions that remained the prototype for botanical observation for 1,000 years. During the stagnant period of the Middle Ages the knowledge of the classical scholars was preserved in the European monasteries and by the Arabs in the Middle East. In the 16th and 17th cent. an interest in botany revived in Europe and spread to America by way of European conquest and colonization. At that time both botany and the art of gardening (see garden ) stressed the utility of plants for man; the popular herbal , describing the medical uses of plants, mingled current superstition with fact. In the late 17th and the 18th cent. the influence of the ancient scholars was modified by the growth of scientific botany. Through careful and accurate observation the sciences of taxonomy and morphology (see biology ) were developed, providing the basis for the first systematic classification of organisms, chiefly in the work of Linnaeus . With the microscope came the development of plant anatomy and research on the cell. New knowledge of the principles of chemistry and physics spurred experimentation in plant physiology, notably the early work of Stephen Hales on the sources and manufacture of plant food, which led to studies of such basic processes as photosynthesis . Modern botany has expanded into all areas of biology, including molecular biology , and has developed such specialties as ethnobotany, which studies the use of plants in preindustrial societies. Perhaps most significant was the work of Mendel in plant breeding at the middle (1859) of the 19th cent., from which grew the science of genetics . Allied with experimental botany are the various practical aspects that have developed into specific scientific disciplines (e.g., agriculture , agronomy , horticulture , and forestry ).

Bibliography: See J. von Sachs, History of Botany (tr. 1890, repr. 1967); C. L. Wilson and W. E. Loomis, Botany (4th ed. 1967); C. B. Lees, Gardens, Plants and Man (1970); A. G. Morton, History of Botanical Science (1981).



Author not available, BOTANY., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

The Botany of Desire: A Plant's Eye View of the World. (New and Noteworthy).
World Watch; 1/1/2002; Runyan, Curtis; 251 words ; The Botany of Desire: a Plant's Eye View of the World, by Michael Pollan (New York: Random House, 2001). About ten thousand years ago, writes Michael Pollan in the introduction of The Botany of Desire, a group of plants hit on a remarkably clever strategy: getting us to move and think for them. Now Read more
Profile: Evolution of plants as explained in Michael Pollan's new book, "The Botany of Desire"
Morning Edition (NPR); 6/4/2001; BOB EDWARDS; 994 words ; ... It also liquored up the American frontier. Tomorrow, the apple. For NPR News, I'm Ketzel Levine. EDWARDS: There's more about The Botany of Desire on ... talkingplants@npr.org. (Credits) EDWARDS: This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Bob Edwards. Read more
Where biotech meets botany
The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 3/8/2005; LINDA A. JOHNSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS; 863 words ; LINDA A. JOHNSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Record (Bergen County, NJ) 03-08-2005 Where biotech meets botany -- Firm uses plants as tool to make drug compounds By LINDA A. JOHNSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Date: 03-08-2005, Tuesday Section: BUSINESS Edtion: All Editions Inside greenhouses where Read more
Book reviews: The Botany of Desire: A plant's view of the planet
The Scotsman; 3/30/2002; Bella Bathurst; 718 words ; The Botany of Desire by Michael Pollan Bloomsbury, 15.99 pounds The new theory about dogs and cats is that they are not our subjects or our dependants, but our parasites. According to this theory, we didn't tame them because of some inchoate human desire to have our morning newspaper brought to us Read more
Sidewalk botany
Green Teacher; 7/1/2000; Sandra K Riedel; 3014 words ; Rediscovering nature on our doorsteps opens up a kaleidoscope of educational opportunities. WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME you took your class out to the alley to see what was growing there? Most North American children live in cities. Yet the ecosystem most readily accessible to these children, the one Read more
American Household Botany: A History of Useful Plants 1620-1900
Northeastern Naturalist; 1/1/2005; Rees, Cathy; 156 words ; American Household Botany: A History of Useful Plants 1620-1900. Judith Sumner. 2004. Timber Press, Portland, OR. 396 pp. $27.95, hardcover. Combining the fields of ethnobotany, economic botany, and horticulture, Sumner describes the household uses to which European settlers put native plants, as Read more
Rooting around for plant IDs // Floyd Swink reigns as king of botany
Chicago Sun-Times; 5/17/1998; SUSAN MCCLURE; 686 words ; In botany circles, the name Floyd Swink is spoken with great reverence. In a field where scientists ponder the electronically scanned surface of a microscopic pollen grain and separate chromosomal bands to identify true ancestry of a particular plant, Swink is a king. Swink, taxonomist emeritus for Read more
Daring botany.(BIOLOGY TODAY)
The American Biology Teacher; 10/1/2007; Flannery, Maura C.; 3697 words ; ... a perfect time to do this because plants appear to be hot right now and plant blindness seems on the wane. Plants are in the news as harbinger's of global warming (Davey, 2007) and as a possible means to ease this phenomenon (Reay, 2007), as well as being ... Read more
A rose is still a rose, but everything else in botany is turned on its head Plants That Now Have New Relatives
The Independent - London; 11/23/1998; Michael McCarthy Environment Correspondent; 1002 words ; IT BEGAN seven years ago, when scientists at Kew Gardens started comparing the plants of the world through their DNA, their genetic blueprint, on a large scale for the first time. What they found will cause a botanical revolution. Comparison of individual genes showed that the relationships between Read more
Planting seeds of knowledge Botany Buddies teach younger kids.(Neighbor)
Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 4/28/2001; Findlay, Melynda; 739 words ; Byline: Melynda Findlay Daily Herald Staff Writer The Westfield School gym was a peaceful picture, with second- graders working hand in hand with fourth- and fifth- graders, reading books, coloring - and making monsters. It wasn't a Frankenstein experiment gone wrong. It was just a day in the life Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Botany
Plant Sciences Botany Botany is the study of plants. Plants make up a large fraction of all living organisms, and the study of botany is equally broad, including the physiology , genetics, anatomy, and morphology ... Read more
Forensic Botany
Plant Sciences Forensic Botany Forensic botany is the application of the plant sciences to legal matters. Most often ... plant substances even if no other plant material is present. Forensic botany is a new and growing field. Many criminal investigators, medical ... Read more
botany
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia ... interactions of plants with their physical environment. The science of botany traces back to the ancient Greco-Roman world but received its modern ... of modern and fossil pollen and spores ). forestry , horticulture . botany botany botany Read more
Botany Bay
World Encyclopedia Botany Bay Large, shallow inlet immediately s of Port Jackson, Sydney Harbour, New South Wales, Australia. It was visited in 1700 by Captain James Cook , who named it because of its flora. It is fed by the Georges and Woronora rivers, and is c. 1.6km (1mi) wide at its mouth. Read more
Coffee, Botany of
Biology Coffee, Botany of Coffee is made from the bean of the coffee plant, Coffea arabica or Coffea canephora, in the Rubiaceae family. It is native ... Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

Cannabis Forgetting and the Botany of Desire: Michael Pollan